XAI sues the state government over its AI regulatory bill: Are tech giants shielding AI to inject ideological bias and discrimination?

ChainNewsAbmedia

Musk’s AI company xAI has filed a lawsuit against Colorado’s latest AI regulations, arguing that they violate the constitutionally protected freedom of speech. However, as Grok continues to produce discriminatory content and influence people’s perceptions through algorithms, is AI becoming a tool for tech giants or bad actors to spread ideology and discrimination?

xAI sues Colorado: AI regulatory law infringes on free speech

This week, xAI filed a lawsuit with the U.S. Federal District Court for Colorado, seeking to block the state’s AI regulatory rules, which are set to take effect this June. Signed in 2024 by Democratic Governor Jared Polis, the law is intended to require AI systems to prevent “algorithmic discrimination” in areas including education, employment, healthcare, housing, and financial services, and is the first comprehensive AI regulatory legislation in the U.S.

In the lawsuit, xAI argues that the law violates free speech protected by the U.S. Constitution and claims that the regulation will force its chatbot, Grok, to “promote Colorado’s ideological stances, especially on racial justice issues,” which it says is essentially forcing the government to decide what AI can and cannot say.

Former xAI spokesperson Katie Miller voiced support for the lawsuit on the X platform: “Colorado wants to force Grok to follow its views on fairness and race, not to pursue the greatest possible degree of truth. Grok answers to evidence, not to regulations from an awakened left-wing government.”

Grok has a record of discrimination—where is the line for AI free speech?

Yet Grok’s own performance makes the argument particularly ironic. This chatbot has long been mired in controversy; it has repeatedly generated content that is racist, sexist, and anti-Semitic, spreading “white genocide” conspiracy theories, and it has even publicly referred to itself as “Mecha Hitler (MechaHitler).”

It’s not hard to see the contradiction: on one hand, xAI refuses to accept government interference with ideological messaging; on the other hand, it has allowed the model to continue outputting discriminatory hate content with clear bias.

(From anti-Semitism to an AI girlfriend? The “partner mode” female characters from Musk’s Grok spark spillover controversy)

AI as a corporate data collector—can it really be stopped from controlling public opinion?

The problem with Grok is just a small part of a much larger crisis. Comedian Duncan Trussell recently said on Joe Rogan’s podcast that AI algorithms build a “psychological profile” of each person by continuously tracking users’ voice and click data, asking and answering preference questions, behavior patterns, and daily habits:

AI has long been sorting and categorizing each of us—it knows what you like and what content you’ll look at a couple more times. Those AI companies have an extremely accurate “psychological state analysis (psychological profile)” for everyone.

He emphasized that this technology has already been used by companies for precise advertising, and he also worries that governments, tech giants, or large organizations could use it to conduct “microtargeting (Nudging)” manipulation—to slowly instill ideas outside one’s comfort zone, shape public opinion at scale, or control narratives, achieving subtle long-term effects. That can gradually lead users to accept a certain viewpoint, buy things, or influence their political and social stances.

AI could become a tool for ideological infiltration—reading comprehension becomes a new focus

Colorado’s AI law is an attempt to build a barrier before this line of defense fully collapses. Ironically, the one opposing the barrier is a company whose own products have repeatedly demonstrated their problems. The outcome of xAI’s lawsuit will not only be a legal showdown between a company and a state government; it may also become a key precedent for the direction of AI regulation in the U.S.

This article xAI sues the state’s AI regulation law: Are tech giants guarding AI’s infusion of ideology and discrimination? was first published on Chain News ABMedia.

Disclaimer: The information on this page may come from third parties and does not represent the views or opinions of Gate. The content displayed on this page is for reference only and does not constitute any financial, investment, or legal advice. Gate does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information and shall not be liable for any losses arising from the use of this information. Virtual asset investments carry high risks and are subject to significant price volatility. You may lose all of your invested principal. Please fully understand the relevant risks and make prudent decisions based on your own financial situation and risk tolerance. For details, please refer to Disclaimer.

Related Articles

DeepSeek V4-Flash goes live on Ollama Cloud, US-hosted: Claude Code, OpenClaw one-click integration

Ollama Cloud has launched DeepSeek V4-Flash, with inference hosted on U.S. servers, providing three sets of one-click commands to connect Claude Code, OpenClaw, and Hermes. V4-Flash/V4-Pro use a MoE architecture, with native support for 1M context, and reduce costs with Token-wise compression + DSA sparse attention. In a 1M scenario, token FLOPs per token drop by 27%, and KV cache drops by 10%. API-compatible with OpenAI ChatCompletions and Anthropic, making it easy to switch between multiple workflows and lowering costs and data-sovereignty risk.

ChainNewsAbmedia27m ago

Web3 AI Infrastructure AIW3 Raises $2M in Seed Funding Led by Buffalo Capital

Gate News message, April 24 — Web3 AI infrastructure platform AIW3 announced the completion of a $2 million seed round funding. The round was led by Buffalo Capital, with GalaXin Capital and Three-stones Ventures participating as co-investors. AIW3 is transitioning toward an Agent-as-a-Service

GateNews49m ago

Cohere Acquires German AI Firm Aleph Alpha, Secures $600M Investment for European Expansion

Gate News message, April 24 — Canadian AI company Cohere announced plans to acquire German AI firm Aleph Alpha to strengthen its presence in Europe. Schwarz Group, a backer of Aleph Alpha, plans to invest $600 million in Cohere's Series E funding round. The funding round is expected to close in 202

GateNews1h ago

Xpeng, Xiaomi Lead In-Car AI Push at Beijing Auto Show

Gate News message, April 24 — Chinese automakers showcased advanced in-car AI systems at the Beijing Auto Show on April 24, as the country accelerates its AI Plus strategy and seeks greater independence from foreign semiconductors. Xpeng demonstrated voice-controlled parking that allows drivers to

GateNews2h ago

Former ByteDance Seed Engineer: ByteDance AI Iteration Takes Six Months vs Google's Three Months

Gate News message, April 24 — Zhang Chi, a former engineer at ByteDance's Seed team and current assistant professor at Peking University, revealed on the podcast "Into Asia" that ByteDance requires approximately six months to complete one full cycle of large language model training (pretraining

GateNews2h ago

OpenAI Engineer Clive Chan Challenges V4 Hardware Recommendations, Citing Errors and Vagueness vs. V3

Gate News message, April 24 — OpenAI engineer Clive Chan has raised detailed objections to the hardware recommendations chapter in the V4 technical report, calling it "surprisingly mediocre and error-prone" compared to the acclaimed V3 version. V3's hardware guidance, which included Q&A sessions

GateNews2h ago
Comment
0/400
No comments